![](https://images.advfn.com/static/default-user.png) A bit behind in my reading. This is from the latest HY23:
"Third Point Investors (Discount: 21.2%/Contribution: -0.53%) Third Point Investors (‘TPOU’) materially underperformed with its NAV falling by -4% versus +16% and +18% gains for the S&P 500 and MSCI AC World indices respectively. A widening discount (from 17% to 20%) compounded matters and resulted in a share price decline of -8%. While the credit book was a solid contributor to returns, woeful underperformance on both the long and short equity strategies more than offset this with mark-downs in the VC portfolio adding to the pain. AGT also owns a direct position in the Third Point Offshore Master Fund that underlies TPOU. This was acquired as a result of our participation in an exchange facility offered to TPOU shareholders in early 2022, that allowed qualifying shareholders to exchange a portion of their TPOU shareholding for shares in the Master Fund at a 2% discount to NAV. This saw 43% of our position exchanged for shares in the Master Fund, and we have since redeemed this holding at the maximum permissible rate and will have exited entirely by the end of June 23."
Does it mean we have given up on TPOU?
There was a mighty battle last year or so to impose an independent director or two. Maye be Joe Bauernfreund has had enough! :) |
You need to add /a2418352 to the end of the link to make it work. |
Underwhelming 12 month performance here, underperforming against the Japan index trackers which have been in an uptrend over the period and are now at a 12 month high, whereas AVI has been essentially flat. |
hTTps://www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/news/235646/japan-opportunities-in-a-booming-market.aspx? |
![](https://images.advfn.com/static/default-user.png) Back?Financial TimesFinancial Times US20 May 2023Buttons.SearchOptionsFinanceJapan gets its swagger backWeekend F.T. -Activists have their momentThe 500 or so international investors expected to attend next week's CLSA event will be given a number of good reasons to hope that - in the context of Japanese stocks at least - the sun will keep rising in a way it has not for more than three decades.Large funds, such as Elliott and Citadel, have said since the start of the year that they are either opening offices in Tokyo or expanding their coverage of Japan at home.An April visit to Tokyo by Warren Buffett intensified global investor focus on Japan. Berkshire Hathaway's investments in five Japanese stocks make Tokyo its largest market destination outside the US. At the fund's May 6 annual meeting, Buffett reassured his audience he was "not done" with his search for more investable targets there.One reason for why investor interest has so strongly revived is that managements in Japan are now under unambiguous and unavoidable pressure to engage with shareholders in a way they were not before.This year the newly installed head of JPX, the group which owns the Tokyo Stock Exchange, outlined a decisive shift in stance. Hiromi Yamaji publicly rued the fact that more than half of TSE stocks were trading below their book value. He suggested that the exchange would support mechanisms that would cajole companies into improving corporate value, rewarding shareholders and paying greater attention to their cost of capital - three changes investors had largely given up hope of seeing.Masashi Akutsu, chief Japan equity strategist of Bank of America, believes that by picking on low price-to-book, Yamaji had in effect created a formalised metric of shame for managements to live in fear of."Investors are asking me whether the TSE's plan will work without punishment and I say yes, it will. When the corporate governance code was introduced in 2015 it was a time of deflation and companies had little motivation to dramatically change their behaviour. This time the economic situation is different," he says, noting how radically the return of inflation to Japan after such a long absence had shifted the scenery.At the same time, shareholder activism has also evolved to sit more comfortably in the mainstream of Japan investment. The number of activist funds in the country has risen from under 10 in 2014 to nearly 70 this year. Between 2015 and 2022, notes Masatoshi Kikuchi, chief equity strategist at Mizuho Securities, the number of shareholder proposals submitted by activists in Japan rose from below five to nearly 60. |
15/5/23 Net Asset Value -- Debt at fair value: 213.76 pence |
They've taken a new position in News Corp - sounded a bit bizarre to me when I first heard this, but the rationale sounds logical enough. |
OCI is at an all time high I see yet still well below its NAV. |
htTPs://www.assetvalueinvestors.com/agt/content/uploads/2023/04/AGT-March-2023.pdf |
hTTps://www.trustintelligence.co.uk/articles/fund-profile-avi-global-apr-2023 |
I started to put a bit into Japan directly some years ago, mostly with AJOT and of course still indirectly with AGT. Japan is not doing badly but it has not been roaring either, despite all the talks of being undervalued for years or decade. Of course, the day I give up and sell I know AJOT and the rest will shot up 20% within days, so I hold. :) |
..........the Economist runs a ‘Big Mac’ index, comparing the cost of a Big Mac in different countries. It implies that the yen is more than 40% undervalued versus the dollar. |
This has now overtaken SMT as the best performing global investment trust over 3y (both NAV and share price returns). No reason for this still be trading on a 9% discount. |
Noted:
As a result of the review, the Board of Directors of FEMSA has approved a series of actions and divestitures conducive to achieving this strategic focus within the next 24 to 36 months:
Divestiture of Heineken investment, subject to market conditions. FEMSA-appointed directors will resign from the Heineken Boards.
FEMSA will explore strategic alternatives for Envoy Solutions, FEMSA’s other minority investment, and other non-core, non-strategic business units.
FEMSA will seek to reduce its existing debt to achieve a target leverage of approximately 2x Net Debt/EBITDA ex-KOF1, maintaining a solid investment grade credit rating.
Capital in excess of that required for organic and inorganic growth in our core business verticals will be returned to FEMSA shareholders over time. |
certainly AGT has a nice uptrending chart but such a slow mover and I use CFDs which means overnight financing charges . I hate stamp duty if buying the shares and prfer shares where no SD payable such as S32, GLEN , PLUS etc |
AVI GLOBAL TRUST: Seeking out value others have missed and avoiding buying shares in big name growth stars like Amazon or Applehttps://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/article-11661025/AVI-GLOBAL-TRUST-952m-fund-seeks-value-missed.html |
hTTps://citywire.com/investment-trust-insider/news/avi-japan-gears-up-to-invest-in-stock-with-100-upside/a2407014?re=105034&refea=252901 |
We might offload some of it and take some winnings. Good news either way as AGT is relatively heavy in OCI.
This could put us back over 200p again soon. |
OCI just jumped to an all time high. |